Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 821 of 2002
PETITIONER:
G.N. NAYAK
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GOA UNIVERSITYAND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/01/2002
BENCH:
S. Rajendra Babu & Ruma Pal
JUDGMENT:
RUMA PAL, J.
Leave granted.
The object of scrutiny, in this judgment, is the
selection of the appellant as Professor of Marine Science in
the University of Goa. The appellant’s selection was
challenged under Article 226 of the Constitution of India by
the respondent No.5 who was himself a candidate for
selection to the post. The challenge was upheld by the High
Court.
The events which formed the basis of the High Court’s
decision can be said to have commenced in 1991 when the
post of Professor, Marine Science fell vacant.
Advertisements were issued from time to time but no
candidate could be found who fulfilled the essential
qualifications for the post. On 10th August 1994, an
advertisement was again issued for the post of Professor,
Marine Science. The hand-out distributed to the applicants
prescribed the minimum qualifications as:
"An eminent scholar with public work
of high quality actively engaged in
research with 10 years of experience
in post graduate teaching and/or
research at the University/National
level Institution including experience
of guiding research at doctoral level.
OR
An outstanding scholar with
established reputation which
significant contribution to knowledge."
Additional qualifications prescribed by the University
Grants Commission were also stated as:
"Specialisation: M.Sc., Ph.D. in Marine
Science or any related subject with
outstanding accomplishments of teaching
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and research in branches of Marine Science,
Marine Biology, Marine Biotechnology
Marine Geology, Chemical Oceanography
or Physical Oceanography with a proven
record of publications in international
journals".
Both the appellant and the respondent No. 5 applied
for the post. Both of them were Readers in the Department
of Marine Science, the respondent No. 5 being senior most.
Both were called for interviews on 13th September 1995.
Sometime before the date of the interview a note was
written by the respondent No. 2 as Head of the Department
to the Vice Chancellor requesting for the holding of an
urgent interview for the appointment of Professor; Marine
Science. The note placed on record an appointment letter
received by the appellant for appointment as Professor in
Geology in the University of Gulbarga. The note extolled
the qualities of the appellant and concluded with the
following paragraphs:
"8. HOD (Head of Department)
submits that if Dr. Nayak (the
appellant) is relieved from this
Dept., the Dept. and the
University will lose a dedicated
and intelligent faculty whose
services are very essential for
this newly emerged dept. and the
young Goa University in general
at this juncture.
9. It may be noted that Goa
University had already
advertised a post of Professor in
Marine Sciences in January,
1995 for which Dr.Nayak is also
an applicant. In the light of
above, it is earnestly requested
that Vice Chancellor may kindly
hold the interviews as early as
possible without re-advertising
the same, so that Dr. Nayak is
given a chance to answer the
interview and if selected may be
retained by the University.
This note was endorsed by the Dean of the Faculty on
6th August 1995 who forwarded the note with the
endorsement that he fully agreed with the views expressed
by the respondent No. 2 and suggested that interviews
should be held.
The respondent No. 5 obtained a copy of this note and
on 23rd August 1995 wrote a letter to the Chancellor as well
as to the Vice Chancellor objecting to the participation of
the respondent No. 2 and the Dean of the Faculty in the
selection on the ground that he apprehended that they
would be biased against him and that they had in writing
disclosed their bias in favour of the appellant. There is no
dispute that the Vice Chancellor received the letter but he
did not reply.
The respondent No. 5 then filed a writ application
(W.P. No. 264/95) in the High Court seeking to stop the
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participation of the respondent No. 2 as well the nominee of
the Vice Chancellor in the selection process. The writ
petition was withdrawn on 12th September 1995. According
to the respondent No. 5, the previous writ application had
been withdrawn because the Court had observed that the
petition was premature and also because the respondent-
University had given an oral assurance to the Court that the
respondent No. 2 would not be participating in the selection
process. This has been denied by the appellant and the
University.
On 13th September 1995, interviews were held as
scheduled. However, the respondent No. 2 did not take part
in the selection process. The Selection Committee found
that neither the appellant nor the respondent No. 5 were
suitable for the post.
In October 1995, a fresh advertisement was issued for
the post. This time, although the essential qualifications as
advertised in 1994 remained the same, the additional
qualifications were amended so that the specialisation read:
"Professor of Marine Science:
Specialisation: Any branch of Marine
Sciences, namely physical
Oceanography, Marine Chemistry,
Marine Geology or Marine Geology
or Marine Biology."
The requirement of ’M.Sc.-Ph.D. in Marine Science
or any related subject with outstanding accomplishment of
Teaching and Research and also with proven record of
publications in international journals’ was done away with.
A fresh Selection Committee was constituted pursuant to
the 1995 advertisement. It met on 20th May 1996. This time
the respondent No. 2 participated. The Committee
recommended the appointment of the appellant. The
appellant’s appointment was accepted by the Executive
Council and a formal order appointing the appellant as
Professor of Marine Science was issued to him on 8th June
1996.
The respondent No. 5 filed a second writ petition
challenging the selection of the appellant. The challenge
was upheld by the High Court broadly on the following
grounds:
1) The eligibility criteria as advertised for the
purpose of selection had been illegally
amended in disregard of the provisions of
the Statutes of the University;
2) The Selection Committee was not legally
constituted;
3) No records had been maintained by the
Selection Committee as to how the inter-se
grading was done between the candidates;
4) The selection process was vitiated by bias;
5) The appellant was not qualified and did not
possess the essential qualifications as
advertised for the post.
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After the decision of the High Court, since the
selection of the appellant as Professor, Marine Science was
set aside, a special post was created for the appellant by the
University where he is now serving.
The first submission raised on behalf of the appellant
is in the nature of a preliminary objection. According to
him, the respondent No. 5 having withdrawn the earlier writ
petition without liberty to file a fresh application on the
same cause of action could not be permitted to re-agitate the
identical issues again.
The submission is misconceived. The first writ
application had been filed on the ground of apprehended
bias on the part of the respondent No. 2. In the present
case, the allegation is of actual bias. Furthermore, the
subject matter of the earlier writ application was the
selection which was due to be held on 13th September 1995
pursuant to the advertisement issued on 10th August 1994.
The subject matter of the subsequent writ application is in
connection with the advertisement issued in October 1995
and the selection which was held on 20th May 1996. The
subject matter of both proceedings being different, the
second writ application is competent.
To appreciate the arguments of opposing counsel on
the merits, the framework of the law within which the events
took place are noted. The University of Goa was established
in 1984 by the Goa University Act, 1984 (hereinafter
referred to as ’the Act’). The Act provides for the
management and running of the University by Statutes
framed under Sections 22 and 23, Ordinances under Section
24 and Regulations under Section 25. Under the Act, the
Lt. Governor of the Union Territory has been constituted ex-
officio Visitor of the University. By virtue of an
amendment to the Act in 2000, the Visitor is now known as
the Chancellor of the University. The Chancellor is the
Head of the University. Among the authorities of the
University, we are concerned with the Executive Council
and the Academic Council. The Executive Council is the
principal executive body of the University (Section 18) and
is empowered by Section 23 (2) to make Statutes subject to
the approval of the Chancellor dealing with a range of
subjects including the appointment of teachers and other
academic staff of the University. The Academic Council is,
on the other hand, the principal academic body of the
University and is mandated to ’subject to the provisions of
the Act, the Statutes and Ordinances, co-ordinate and
exercise general supervision over the academic policies of
the University’.
The first Statutes of the University are set out in the
Schedule to the Act. They have been amended from time to
time and further Statutes have also been incorporated in the
Schedule. We are concerned primarily with Statutes 8 and
15.
Statute 8(1) empowers the Executive Council:
"(i ) to create teaching and
academic posts, to determine the
number and emoluments of such posts
and to define the duties and conditions
of service of Professors, Readers,
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Lecturers and other academic staff and
Principal of colleges and institutions
maintained by the University;
Provided that no action shall be
taken by the Executive Council in
respect of the number, qualifications
and the emoluments of teachers of the
University and academic staff
otherwise than after consideration of
the recommendations of the Academic
Council."
Statute 15 provides for constitution of the Selection
Committee for making recommendations to the Executive
Council for appointments of the various posts. The
constitution of the Selection Committee varies according to
the nature of the post. For the post of Professor, the
Selection Committee is required to consist of the Vice
Chancellor, a nominee of the Chancellor (Visitor), the Head
of the Department and in case of his non-availability, a
person nominated by the Planning Board from its members,
the Dean of the Faculty concerned, one Professor to be
nominated by the Vice Chancellor and three persons not in
the service of the University nominated by the Executive
Council out of a panel of names recommended by the
Academic Council for their special knowledge of or interest
in the subject with which the Professor as the case may be,
will be concerned.
According to the respondent No. 5, the amendment of
the qualifications for the post of Professor of Marine
Science was illegal. It was contended that under Statute 8,
it is the Executive Council which has to prescribe the
qualifications after considering the recommendations of the
Academic Council. According to the respondent No. 5, the
qualifications which were prescribed in the 1995
advertisement and hand-out issued to the applicants in
connection therewith had not been prescribed by the
Executive Council nor recommended by the Academic
Council. Whether this is so or not, this is not a grievance
which could have been raised by the respondent No. 5. He
knew that there was a change in the eligibility criteria for
the post yet he applied for the post and appeared at the
interview without protest. He cannot be allowed to now
contend that the eligibility criteria were wrongly framed.
We then come to the question of the qualifications of
the appellant and whether he was qualified to have at all
been considered for appointment to the post of Professor.
If we analyse the 1995 advertisement and hand-out it
will be seen that the minimum qualifications prescribed for
a candidate were that he/she had to be:
(a) an eminent scholar;
(b) with work of high quality;
(c) actively engaged in research;
(d) with 10 years’ experience in
post-graduate teaching and/or research
at the University/ national level
institution including experience of
guiding research at doctoral level
OR
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(a) an outstanding scholar
(b) with established reputation;
(c) with significant contribution to
knowledge.
For a candidate to be qualified under the second
limb, apart from a brilliant academic record and having an
established standing, the candidate must have been
responsible for original research which had added to the
field of the particular science, not in small measure but
significantly. The appellant has not sought to justify his
appointment under this limb but has claimed that he was
qualified under the first. For the purposes of this
judgment, we will assume that the appellant fulfilled the
first three qualifications under the first limb. The difficulty
arises in connection with the fourth requirement, namely,
10 years experience of teaching or research.
The appellant claims in his bio-data that he
completed his post-graduation in 1982 and acquired his
Doctorate in the year 1986. On 17th December 1986, he
was appointed as a Lecturer in the University after which he
became a Reader on 19th June 1991. The advertisement was
issued in October 1995 and the Selection Committee met on
20th May 1996. The appellant claims that if the research
which was conducted by him for three years in connection
with obtaining his Doctoral degree is counted in addition to
his teaching experience, he is qualified.
That a candidate can club together his qualifications
of teaching and research to cover the 10 years’ period has
been held in Dr. Kumar Bar Das v. Utkal University. The
question still remains would any kind of research at a
University do? Strictly speaking and as a matter of legal
interpretation, the phrase ’research at the
University/national level institution’ should be read
ejusdem generis and in the context of the alternate
qualifications specified viz. ’teaching experience’ and the
last phrase ’including experience of guiding research at
doctoral level’. In other words, the research must be
independent such that the researcher could guide others
aspiring for doctorate degrees and not the research where
the researcher is striving for a doctorate degree himself.
The appellant’s research prior to 17th September 1986 was
pre-doctoral. Consequently and according to the letter of
the law perhaps the appellant was not qualified to be
considered as a candidate for a Professorship in 1996 since
he had failed to meet the criteria by about four months.
However, the Court would not be justified in adopting a
legalistic approach and proceed on a technical view of the
matter without considering the intention of the University in
laying down the condition of eligibility , since it is for the
University to decide what kind of research would be
adequate to qualify for professorship. The University had
intended, understood and consistently proceeded on
the basis that the pre-doctoral research could be counted
towards the 10 years experience clause. So did the
respondent No. 5. When the respondent No. 5 applied for
the post when it was advertised in 1994 he did not have 10
years cumulative experience of teaching and post doctoral
research. Since he had obtained a doctorate degree in
November 1985, the University also considered his
application and called him for an interview in September
1985 though according to a strict interpretation of the
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eligibility criteria the respondent No. 5 was not qualified.
Finally in Dr. Kumar Bar Das V. Utkal University 1999
(1) SCC 453, this Court in construing similar eligibility
criteria has held (at p. 458) that the research required could
include pre-doctoral research experience.
Then it was said that the Selection Committee was
faultily constituted. Statute 15 has already been quoted
earlier. According to the Registrar’s affidavit, the
Academic Council had prepared a panel of subject experts
and forwarded it to the Executive Council. The panel as
approved by the Executive Council was (1) Prof. Subba Rao
or Prof. V.V. Modi ; (2) Dr. J. Samant or Dr. D.
Chandramohan; (3) Prof. K.T. Damodaran or Prof. R.K.
Banerjee, Prof. Subba Rao and Prof. V.V. Modi had both
regretted their inability to be part of the Selection
Committee. Dr. D. Chandramohan who had been mentioned
as an alternative choice by the Executive Council was
inducted into the panel. According to the respondent No.
5, the panel of experts had been prepared by the Executive
Council subject wise, the idea being to have experts from
the specialised fields mentioned in the advertisement of
October 1995. Our attention was drawn to the fact that
Prof. Subba Rao was Professor, Immunology and
Biochemistry and Professor Modi was from the Department
of Biology and Biotechnology.
There is nothing on the record which shows that the
Executive Council had ’paired’ the experts according to
their special field of knowledge. On the contrary, it has not
been pointed out how the subjects of Immunology and
Biochemistry on the one hand can be paired with Biology
and Biochemistry and not with Marine Biology in which
Dr. Chandramohan is stated to be an expert. In fact each of
the experts had been approved by the Academic Council as
being fit to be to in the Selection Committee. The
Executive Council merely prepared the panel in order of
preference. If the preferred members were unavailable, the
other members approved by the Academic Council and
recommended by the Executive Council could be
empanelled. There has thus been no violation of Statute 15.
The High Court, however, held that there was a
further defect in the proceedings. The Selection
Committee was constituted by the following persons:
1.Prof.N.C. NigamVice Chancellor Chairman
2 Prof.S.Mavinkurve-Dean of the Faculty Member
3.Prof.U.M.X.Sangodkar-Head of Department Member
(the respondent No. 2)
4. Prof. D.J. Bhat-Nominee of the V.C. Member
5. Ex. Admiral Dr.Menon,Nominee of the VC Member
6. Prof. K.T. Damodaran-Subject Expert Member
7.Prof. J. Samant-Subject Expert Member
8.Dr. Chandramohan-Subject Expert, Member
but the Report of the Selection Committee records,
"Shri/Dr.D.Chandramohan regretted his/her ability to be
present at the meeting". With the absence of Dr.
Chandramohan the quorum would have been incomplete.
According to the Registrar’s affidavit, this was a
typographical error as Dr. Chandramohan had in fact
participated and signed the Report. The statement of the
Registrar on oath should have been accepted
by the High Court, particularly when
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there was no allegation even on the part of the respondent
No. 5 that Dr. Chandramohan did not in fact sit on the
Selection Committee.
This brings us to the issue of bias.
Bias may be generally defined as partiality or
preference. It is true that any person or authority required
to act in a judicial or quasi-judicial matter must act
impartially. "If however, ’bias’ and ’partiality’ be
defined to mean the total absence of preconceptions in the
mind of the judge, then no one has ever had a fair trial and
no one ever will. The human mind, even at infancy, is no
blank piece of paper. We are born with predispositions
and the processes of education, formal and informal,
create attitudes which precede reasoning in particular
instances and which, therefore, by definition, are
prejudices".
It is not every kind of bias which in law is taken to
vitiate an act. It must be a prejudice which is not founded
on reason, and actuated by self interest whether pecuniary
or personal. Because of this element of personal interest,
bias is also seen as an extension of the principle of natural
justice that no man should be a judge in his own cause.
Being a state of mind, a bias is sometimes impossible to
determine. Therefore, the Courts have evolved the principle
that it is sufficient for a litigant to successfully impugn an
action by establishing a reasonable possibility of bias or
proving circumstances from which the operation of
influences affecting a fair assessment of the merits of the
case can be inferred.
In A.K. Kraipak and Others V. Union of India and
Others 1969 (2) SCC 262, the Selection Committee had
been constituted under Regulation 3 of the Indian Forest
Service (Initial Recruitment) Regulations, 1966 for the
purpose of making selections to any State cadre of the All
India Forest Service. The Chief Conservator of Forests was
selected. Setting aside the selection, this Court held that the
Chief Conservator of Forests being himself one of the
candidates seeking to be selected to the All India Forest
Service should not have been included as a member of the
Selection Board because of the possibility of bias.
As we have noted, every preference does not vitiate
an action. If it is rational and unaccompanied by
considerations of personal interest, pecuniary or otherwise, it
would not vitiate a decision. For example, if a senior officer
expresses appreciation of the work of a junior in the
Confidential Report, it would not amount to bias nor would it
preclude that senior officer from being part of the
Departmental Promotion Committee to consider such junior
officer along with others for promotion.
In this case, the respondent No. 5 has relied on the
note quoted earlier to allege bias against the respondent No.
2. No doubt the respondent No. 2 has, in the note, lavished
praise on the performance of the appellant. As the Head of
the Department it would be but natural that he formed an
opinion as to the abilities of the Readers working under
him. It is noteworthy that it was not the respondent No. 5’s
case that the respondent No.2’s praise of the appellant was
unmerited or that the respondent No. 2 had any extraneous
reasons or reasons other than the competence of the
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appellant for selecting the appellant’s as Professor. We are
also not persuaded as the High Court was, to infer bias
merely because at the previous selection in September 1995
the appellant was found unsuitable. If the outcome of the
previous selection was conclusive as to the non-suitability
of the appellant for all times to come, it was conclusive as
far as the respondent No. 5 as well. Yet the respondent No.
5 applied again because he knew that a reappraisal by a new
Selection Committee at a later point of time might yield a
different result.
As for the failure to keep any record as to the grading
of the candidates under Statute 15, the procedure to be
followed by the Selection Committee in making
recommendations are required to be such as may be laid
down in the Ordinances. No Ordinance was drawn to our
notice which prescribes a particular mode of rating the
respective merits of the candidates. When appointments are
being made to posts as high as that of a Professor, it may
not be necessary to give marks as the means of assessment.
But whatever the method of measurement of suitability used
by the Selection Committee, it was an unanimous decision
and the Courts will, in the circumstances obtaining in this
case, have to respect that.
Accordingly, we set aside the decision of the
High Court and allow the appeal but without any order as
to costs.
.J .J.
(S. Rajendra Babu)
.J.
(Ruma Pal)
January 29, 2002